Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

Think Again: The law is an ass ["International" law]
Jerusalem Post ^ | July 17, 2007 | Jonathan Rosenblum

Posted on 07/17/2007 10:58:43 AM PDT by Alouette

It's time to recognize that 'customary international humanitarian law' is neither customary, nor law, nor humanitarian.

The term "collective punishment" conjures up images of Nazis executing entire villages in retaliation for a partisan ambush. No wonder Jews are acutely sensitive to charges of imposing collective punishment or targeting civilians.

And we hear those charges a lot: last summer in Lebanon; every time Israeli artillery hit back at the source of Kassam fire from Gaza. Were Syria to fire missiles at Israeli cities, and Israel to strike back at Syrian cities with even greater force, the international community would undoubtedly condemn Israel.

Accusations of war crimes by states attempting to defend against terrorist attacks have become a major weapon in the terrorist arsenal. In the words of Boaz Ganor of the Herzliya Interdisciplinary Center, so-called customary international humanitarian law (CIHL) is a "force multiplier" for terrorist groups, who think nothing of putting civilians in the line of fire.

That requires some serious rethinking of the laws of war predicated on an outdated model of opposing armies facing off on an open field far removed from civilian populations. Modern warfare inevitably implicates civilian populations.

The doctrine of Mutually Assured Destruction (MAD), which protected against nuclear conflagration during the Cold War, for instance, is predicated on the threat of collective punishment on a massive scale. Few citizens of the Soviet Union would have had any input into the decision to launch a nuclear attack on the United States. But they would nevertheless have been incinerated by the American retaliation. Similarly, Israel's survival today depends on the credibility of our willingness to respond in kind to any attack on Israeli civilians by Iran or Syria.

One might distinguish Soviet citizens from residents of Gaza or southern Lebanon on the grounds that the former were part of a hierarchical governmental structure. But the distinction is far from clear. Hamas in Gaza and Hizbullah in southern Lebanon essentially function as autonomous governments. And they are far more representative of the populations they rule than the government of the Soviet Union ever was. Hamas was popularly elected, and Palestinian polls show widespread support for the ongoing Kassam attacks on Israel. And residents of southern Lebanon have more to say about Hizbullah rocket launchers in their backyard and weapons stored in their basements than Soviet citizens had about the actions of their regime.

IT IS TIME we recognize, to paraphrase Voltaire on the Holy Roman Empire, that "customary international humanitarian law" is neither customary, nor law, nor humanitarian. It is not customary because it is not based on the actual behavior of nations past or present. When the Southern states began executing captured former slaves fighting in the Union Army, president Lincoln announced that the Union would execute captured Confederate soldiers in reprisal. The executions stopped. (In the same vein, denying Palestinians access to security prisoners held by Israel would be far more effective in securing access to our captive soldiers than beseeching the international community to intervene.)

During World War I, the Allies blockaded the Central Powers to force them into submission via starvation. And in 1943, Churchill ordered 1,000 British bombers to hammer Hamburg. (For good reason did the British omit the bombing of civilian populations from the Nuremberg indictments.) The firebombing of Dresden in the waning days of World War II killed tens of thousands of German civilians. Was that firebombing, however, self-evidently immoral if it also saved thousands of far more innocent Jews in the death camps by hastening the end of the war?

Yet if Israel engaged in any of these actions, it would be roundly condemned by the international community.

NOR IS customary international humanitarian law law in any meaningful sense. Its "rules" were not enacted by any international governmental body to which sovereign nation-states ceded the right to legislate. Nor are they even embodied in reciprocal treaty obligations entered into by sovereign states. They are nothing more than "rules" derived from declarative statements made by any and everybody - from various tinpot dictators and tyrants to Human Rights Watch - on what they think international law should be; and presto, according to the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), it is.

Nor are the "rules" humanitarian. As Ganor points out, they render civilian populations more vulnerable by creating incentives for terrorists to operate from their midst.

And notes Jeremy Rabkin, the leading academic student of the inanities of CIHL, the rules are designed to favor guerrilla and terrorist fighters. In particular, they sever the obligations on states trying to defend themselves against terrorism from any reciprocal obligations on the part of terrorists.

Those "rules" are the outgrowth of a Geneva Conference convened by the ICRC in 1975, at which Third World countries outnumbered Western powers. And they form a pattern with UN General Assembly resolutions of the period demanding a New World Economic Order. In effect, they have redistributed military power to terrorist groups.

In responding to claims that Israel has violated CIHL, our recourse must be to elementary logic and an examination of the actual conduct of nations. Just as the US Constitution is not a "suicide pact," neither is international law. Until human rights advocates tell us what we can do to protect our cities from missiles and our citizens from suicide bombers, CIHL has no claim on our attention.

In the meantime, let Israel begin to place the lives of its citizens first, as has every other nation in history. We have no wish to see the people of Gaza starve, but unless the Hamas government stops the Kassams, closes the tunnels bringing in lethal weapons and returns Gilad Schalit, neither does Israel have any obligation to supply food, water and electricity to a quasi-state that has declared war on its existence.


TOPICS: Extended News; Israel; News/Current Events; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: geopolitics; humanitarian; international; terrorism

1 posted on 07/17/2007 10:58:45 AM PDT by Alouette
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | View Replies]

To: 1st-P-In-The-Pod; 2ndDivisionVet; A_Conservative_in_Cambridge; af_vet_rr; agrace; albyjimc2; ...
FReepMail to be added or removed from this pro-Israel/Judaic/Russian Jewry ping list.

Warning! This is a high-volume ping list.

2 posted on 07/17/2007 10:59:22 AM PDT by Alouette (Vicious Babushka)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Alouette
Point of order for the JPost's headline writer: the quotation is "The law is a ass."

Proper, no. Colorful, yes. Dickensian, yes. ;)
3 posted on 07/17/2007 11:01:22 AM PDT by Xenalyte (Lord, I apologize . . . and be with the starving pygmies in New Guinea amen.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Alouette

24/7 aerial and artillery bombardment of Gaza and the West Bank until they surrender. Or until there is no one left to surrender.


4 posted on 07/17/2007 11:06:00 AM PDT by JamesP81 (Keep your friends close; keep your enemies at optimal engagement range)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Alouette
"That requires some serious rethinking of the laws of war predicated on an outdated model of opposing armies facing off on an open field far removed from civilian populations. Modern warfare inevitably implicates civilian populations."

Hasn't warfare, through most of history, generally included the civilian population? Women raped; men enslaved; villages razed; cities surrounded, burned, starved, or infected; crops trampled; children killed; and so on?

5 posted on 07/17/2007 11:10:42 AM PDT by Fudd
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Xenalyte
The law is a ass

JPost style editor has probably never read Dickens.

6 posted on 07/17/2007 11:17:39 AM PDT by Alouette (Vicious Babushka)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 3 | View Replies]

To: Xenalyte

A frequently bumbled quotation.

7 posted on 07/17/2007 11:17:42 AM PDT by dighton
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 3 | View Replies]

To: Fudd
Hasn't warfare, through most of history, generally included the civilian population? Women raped; men enslaved; villages razed; cities surrounded, burned, starved, or infected; crops trampled; children killed; and so on?

This is why war is hell.
8 posted on 07/17/2007 11:19:19 AM PDT by JamesP81 (Keep your friends close; keep your enemies at optimal engagement range)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 5 | View Replies]

To: Alouette

A very likely supposition, now that you mention it!


9 posted on 07/17/2007 11:21:47 AM PDT by Xenalyte (Lord, I apologize . . . and be with the starving pygmies in New Guinea amen.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 6 | View Replies]

To: JamesP81

I would prefer the use of various gas agents, as there are some valuable historical artifacts there.


10 posted on 07/17/2007 11:23:44 AM PDT by MeanWestTexan (Kol Hakavod Fred Thompson)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 4 | View Replies]

To: dennisw; Cachelot; Nix 2; veronica; Catspaw; knighthawk; Alouette; Optimist; weikel; Lent; GregB; ..
If you'd like to be on this middle east/political ping list, please FR mail me.

High Volume. Articles on Israel can also be found by clicking on the Topic or Keyword Israel. or WOT [War on Terror]

----------------------------

11 posted on 07/17/2007 11:23:45 AM PDT by SJackson (isolationism never was, never will be acceptable response to[expansionist] tyrannical governments)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 5 | View Replies]

To: Alouette
In particular, they sever the obligations on states trying to defend themselves against terrorism from any reciprocal obligations on the part of terrorists.

In fact, to a very considerable degree the very structure of modern state-sponsored terrorism is carefully designed to take advantage of this aspect of international law. One might even conclude that such terrorism itself is a necessary implication of the imposition of such law in the absence of proper controls that describe normal jurisprudence within signator states.

The complaint is lodged above that such structures of law are not even-handed. This is actually by design; the purpose of such laws is not to provide one set of rules for all but to "level the playing field" between the collectives that break down into the tendentious "power and oppressed" dichotomy favored by the theorists behind Critical Law. For skeptics such dichotomies are rhetorical devices rather than objective facts, and one consequence of this is open and embarrassing insistence on the part of the adherents of, say, the ICC, "Come submit yourselves to our system so that we may properly punish you for being powerful." What is surprising is that so many credulous citizens of the putative subject countries think this a jolly idea.

The consequences of the rules regarding territorial sovereignty are one example of the sort of abuse written into the structure of the system. A signator nation may attack another signator nation and provide sanctuary for the responsible parties so long as their status as official representatives may be denied. Retaliation becomes illegal, as the author states above. We see this happening in the persons of Iran and Hezbollah operating against Israel from Lebanese territory. Did the system of international law criticize Iran? It did not. It criticized Israel for retaliating because as formal states Israel and Lebanon are bound by the tenets of territorial sovereignty that Hezbollah, as a non-state operator, is not, and whose connections to Iran, although as open as anything in the Middle East, are invisible to the eyes of international legal bodies. This invisibility is not, I suggest, a consequence of bias on the part of the keepers of that law but a necessary consequence of the law's very structure. That's how it operates because that's how it's meant to.

What is astonishing to me is the degree to which the smoothness of rhetoric on the part of the proponents of this system has masked their actively ill intent. Who but a fool would listen to the demand that he bend his neck to the sword because everyone else says it's a good idea?

12 posted on 07/17/2007 11:51:49 AM PDT by Billthedrill
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson